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The Surgeon of Crowthorne: A Tale of Murder,Madness and the Oxford English Dictionary
 
 

The Surgeon of Crowthorne: A Tale of Murder,Madness and the Oxford English Dictionary (Paperback)

by Simon Winchester (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin; New Ed edition (25 Jul 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0140271287
  • ISBN-13: 978-0140271287
  • Product Dimensions: 19.7 x 12.9 x 1.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 24,372 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories:

    #4 in  Books > Society, Politics & Philosophy > Social Sciences > Linguistics > Semantics > Lexicography
    #23 in  Books > Biography > True Crime > Murder
    #44 in  Books > Society, Politics & Philosophy > Social Sciences > Linguistics > Reference

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review
Subtitled "A Tale of Murder, Madness and the Love of Words," this is a remarkable account of the life of W.C. Minor. Not a famous name, but a quite extraordinary man. Minor was an American Army surgeon and millionaire who contributed enormously by post to the first, epic edition of the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) while hidden away in obscurity in Berkshire, England. As the author points out, the OED is the most important work of reference ever created, and, given the globalisation of the English language, is likely to remain so for centuries. But when in 1896 Sir James Murray, the formidable editor of the OED, at last travelled down to Berkshire to find this elusive lexicographer and thank him for all his work, he found Minor in Broadmoor: patient Number 742.

Minor was educated, gentlemanly, industrious, and a psychopathic killer, who had gunned down a man at random in the London streets because he believed his victim was an Irish terrorist after his blood.

Simon Winchester won't win any prizes for the elegance of his prose style, but he has dug up a strange and extraordinary life story and turned it into a compelling piece of historical detective work. He never really penetrates into the central mystery of Minor's madness, because no one can. The mystery remains, inviolable, and makes his tale all the more darkly compelling. --Christopher Hart

Product Description
The making of the Oxford English Dictionary was a monumental 50 year task requiring thousands of volunteers. One of the keenest volunteers was a W C Minor who astonished everyone by refusing to come to Oxford to receive his congratulations. In the end, James Murray, the OED's editor, went to Crowthorne in Berkshire to meet him. What he found was incredible - Minor was a millionaire American civil war surgeon turned lunatic, imprisoned in Broadmoor Asylum for murder and yet who dedicated his entire cell-bound life to work on the English language.

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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Stranger than Fiction, 8 Oct 2004
By Timothy De Ferrars (France) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This book recounts a tale so improbable that as fiction it would have been hard to believe. Two Victorian lives become entwined. On the one hand, a great scholar who has bettered himself through learning, a man of towering reputation and influence; on the other, a millionaire madman whose delusional grip on reality has failed him and left him isolated in a lunatic asylum, a continent away from his family, with only his books for company.

Somehow their paths collide, and for years they work at a distance to create together the greatest reference book in the English language, the Oxford English Dictionary.

Eventually they meet, and their rapport blossoms into true friendship. A strange story unfolds, of gothic madness, violence, improbable love and eventual disintegration.

At times uplifting, at others rather muted, this book can at times be unevenly paced; but overall it is a very rewarding read.

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41 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Winchester missed some significant information., 24 Dec 1998
By A Customer
The subject of "The Surgeon of Crowthorne," by Simon Winchester, is the collaboration of Sir James A. H. Murray, editor of the "Oxford English Dictionary," and Dr. William C. Minor, the American volunteer who worked on the "O.E.D." for 20 years while an inmate in the Broadmoor Lunatic Asylum for the criminally insane. I am a New York playwright who, in 1995, completed a full-length drama focusing on James Murray and William Minor, called "The Dictionary," and whose help Mr. Winchester sought when he was first considering writing his book. (Winchester mentions me in his Acknowledgments.)

Ultimately, Winchester was able to get to almost all of the sources that I had used, as well as a number that I could never have reached. Nonetheless, there is some significant information that Winchester missed in his book, as well as a number of inaccuracies in "The Surgeon of Crowthorne."

About Minor's death Winchester writes, incorrectly, "There were no obituaries." An obituary was published in 1921 in "Yale University Obituary Record of Graduates Deceased During the Year Ending July 1, 1920." From this obituary one learns that Minor was born in the East Indies; that he entered the Yale School of Medicine in 1861 and was graduated in 1863; that he was incarcerated at Broadmoor, transferred to St. Elizabeth's in the U.S., and later transferred from St. Elizabeth's to The Retreat, in Hartford, where he died on March 26, 1920. The Yale obituary also mentions his brother Alfred.

Winchester refers to the lawyer who defended Minor in his murder trial, but does not mention the lawyer's name. My research suggests that the person who defended Minor is the same one who defended Oscar Wilde. The man's name is Edward Clarke. I am surprised that Winchester did not seize upon this possibility.

Winchester theorizes that Minor's clinically paranoid dread of the Irish, and of the Fenians in particular, was the result of his experience as a Union Army Surgeon with Irish troops during the Civil War.

Winchester neglects the fact that during the years that Minor was stationed in New York (on Governors Island) the Fenians were, in fact, his real enemy. Minor lived in New York during 1867 and 1868, when the local papers frequently covered events pertaining to the revolutionary movement in Ireland and to activities of the Irish in New York. In March of 1867 the Irish cause held the front page of just about every newspaper every day. It was during the week of March 18 that the expectation of a Fenian attack on Canada, still part of the British Empire at that time, appeared in at least three separate articles in three different papers. News of U. S. troops being moved from New York to the border to thwart the offensive also made headlines. That Minor would have been selected to assist in the battlefield action against the Fenians is not unlikely.

This attack never took place; however, less than a year before, the Fenians had staged an assault on Canada from New York State. Eight hundred Irishmen crossed the Niagara River and captured Fort Erie. They were subsequently defeated by U.S. troops, and about 700 Fenians were arrested. Minor would have known of this.

Winchester mentions the American vice-consul-general and quotes a letter of his to the Medical Superintendent of Broadmoor, but neglects to cite his name, which is Joshua Nunn. Winchester also failed to locate a series of twenty-two letters by Joshua Nunn, an important source of information regarding Minor. The letters to Minor's family and friends in America contain particulars that conflict with some of Winchester's assumptions regarding Minor's life at Broadmoor and his relations with his family.

Joshua Nunn clearly went beyond the call of duty in his assistance to, and profound concern for, Minor. Nunn was the man who handled all the details of Minor's legal situation as well as Minor's living conditions at Broadmoor. He was also very involved in the press accounts. Nunn not only corresponded and met with Minor and his family but also visited Minor at Broadmoor.

According to the Nunn letters, the family did not want Minor returned to an asylum in the U.S. They were satisfied to let him remain at Broadmoor. This information contradicts Winchester's indication that the family would have rejoiced at Minor's return. Nunn was surprised at the family's neglect of Minor and at their refusal, at one point, to send Minor any more money at Broadmoor.

Nunn makes very clear that Minor's mail was heavily censored. This conflicts with Winchester's implication.

Winchester makes a mystifying observation at the end of his book. He states that it was only at the completion of the "Oxford English Dictionary," in 1927, that Americans could say that the Dictionary "was now, at least partly, of their own making." From the very beginning Americans had the right to claim that the Dictionary was, to a significant extent, a creation of their own making. In Murray's first years of editing the "O.E.D.," fully one half of the 800 volunteer readers with whom he worked were American. James Murray felt that his most avid support came from the United States. He said, "...it is Americans upon whom I depend above all." He called Americans "the most reliable and trustworthy volunteers." In 1883 Murray wrote, "I truly believe that the future of English scholarship lies in the United States, where the language is studied with an enthusiasm unknown here and which will soon leave us far behind."

"The Surgeon of Crowthorne" focuses on some of the same fascinating aspects of the collaboration of Murray and Minor that first inspired me to dramatize the story. It is important, however, to look beyond the surface of material Winchester presents as truth.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A criminally insane man and the Oxford English Dictionary, 12 Jun 2006
By Linda Oskam "dutch-traveller" (Amsterdam Netherlands) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
The Oxford English Dictionary is one of the largest and most encompassing dictionaries in the world. It took almost 70 years to complete and during those years thousands of volunteers scrutinized newspapers, journals and new and old books for new words, new meanings of words and sentences that would clarify the meanings. One of the most active volunteers was the American doctor William Chester Minor. During the 20 years that the doctor collaborated he developed a friendship with the editor, James Murray. When Murray decided to visit doctor Minor, he found that the latter served a lifetime sentence in the Broadmoor Asylum for the Criminally Insane after he had killed an innocent worker. The intellectual doctor Minor was found to be mad as a hatter: at night he heard voices, he claimed he was kidnapped, tortured and abused and under the floor of his cell there would live a bunch of Pygmees. The biographies of Murray, Minor and the Oxford English Dictionary are nicely interrelated in this well-written book.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Delve into a world of polysyllabic sesquipedalianism
The subject of the compilation of the Oxford English Dictionary might seem to some as interesting as plowing through the subject text itself. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Ian David Curry

3.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly interesting read
A copy of this book was left behind by a previous holiday maker in an apartment I spent two weeks on holiday in Portugal this summer. Read more
Published on 16 Oct 2005 by EFMOL

4.0 out of 5 stars A Dictionary will never be the same again …………..
This is a well-told tale that leads the audience through some of the politics involved in the production of the Oxford English Dictionary. Read more
Published on 25 May 2004 by Mr P R Morgan

3.0 out of 5 stars Unusual concept but not enough beef
This book was given to me by my mother who was very enthusiastic about the contents. It laid on a shelf for some time as the subject matter the compiling of the Oxford English... Read more
Published on 6 May 2004 by Elizabeth Taylor

3.0 out of 5 stars Great story, unusual concept but not enough beef
This book was given to me by my mother who was very enthusiastic about thecontents. It laid on a shelf for some time as the subject matter thecompiling of the Oxford English... Read more
Published on 27 April 2004 by Elizabeth Taylor

3.0 out of 5 stars An interesting little book, but not a great book
This is the first book by Simon Winchester that I have read, and I was disappointed. There is an interesting story in here, but it doesn't really come to life. Read more
Published on 26 Dec 2003 by Keith Appleyard

2.0 out of 5 stars Winchester makes a couple of molehills look like mountains
After reading the other, shining reviews of this book, I was expecting a thrilling account of the historical collaboration between two of the 19th Century's greatest minds, the... Read more
Published on 17 Nov 2003 by viciousidol

5.0 out of 5 stars Stranger than fiction!
A brilliant book I only read because it was recommended to me on this site, and the other reviews and description got me interested! Read more
Published on 3 Nov 2003 by R. P. Sedgwick

5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating
Who would have thought that an interesting and captivationg tale could be written about the lengthy and tedious compilation of the definitive dictionary, "The Oxford English... Read more
Published on 11 Aug 2003 by J. Cronin

5.0 out of 5 stars Must read
Of all the books I have read over the last few months I found this the most riverting. Pick it up, start reading and you will not put it down until the end.
Published on 9 Aug 2002 by R. P. Fowler

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